Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DAULAT RAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/04/1997
BENCH:
MADAN MOHAN PUNCHHI, K.S. PARIPOORNAN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Punchhi, J.
This appeal has arisen from an appellate Judgment and
order of the punjab and Haryana High Court passed on
October 19, 1987 in Criminal Appeal No. 427/DB of 1986.
The appellant was employed as a constable in the Punjab
police and at the relevant time was assigned duty as the
Personal Guard of one Brij Lal Goel, Ex-MLA, Rajpura,
District Patiala. Smt. Pushpa, PW was his wife. The couple
had handful of children. They had a single room house to
live in a locality at Rajpura. In the neighbourhood,
Narinder Singh deceased was living having constructed a
house, quite close to the house of Daulat Ram. Narinder
Singh was an educated unmarried young man of 25 having done
his MA. He was staying alone in his house. His father, sub-
Inspector Gurbachan Singh had at one time been posted at
Rajpura, but at the relevant time was posted in the C.I.A.
Staff at Malerkotla, a town about 53 miles away from
Rajpura. His father’s brother, Gurnam Singh, PW lived at
Sunam, at a distance of about 55 miles from Rajpura. Both
the towns were in different directions.
The case of the prosecution is that Gurnam singh, PW,
father’s brother of the deceased had visited Rajpura on a
number of occasions and had developed a feeling that the
deceased was carrying on with Pushpa, P.W. Gurnam Singh, PW
wanted to disrupt the relationship. Thus on July 23, 1985,
sometime after 1.00 PM , he came to Rajpura accompanied by
Haridial Singh, Hardial Singh, PWs and the deceased set out
from the latter’s house for going to Sunam. While so, the
deceased told Gurnam Singh and Hardial Singh, PWs that he
had a message to deliver at the house of Daulat Ram followed
by Gurnam Singh and Hardial Singh PWs. They saw him talking
to Pushpa PW. In the meantime, Daulat Ram, appellant
arrived. Daulat Ram shouted that he was going to teach a
lesson to the deceased for having entered his house and
saying so, he fired five shots in quick succession towards
the deceased from his service revolver. On receipt of
injuries the deceased fell on a cot, which lay in the sole
room. The appellant then further assaulted the deceased with
a knife on his face. Then Pushpa PW intervened. She too was
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given some injuries by the appellant. The appellant
thereafter left the place of occurrence carrying his
revolver with him. Gurnam Singh and Hardial Singh, eye-
witnesses went near the deceased and found him dead.
The prosecution case further is that Gurnam Singh
Leaving behind Hardial Singh near the dead body went to the
local Police Station, Rajpura and lodged the FIR at 2.45 PM.
The investigative machinery was set in motion. SI, Harsajjan
Singh PW 12 came to the spot and prepared the inquest
report. He has shown therein the dead body lying on the cot
in position. The dead body was sent for post-mortem
examination which was conducted by Dr. Vinod Kumar PW.1 at
5.35 PM. He was also required to examine the injuries of
Pushpa PW at 7.00 pm the same day. He found on her three
injuries, two of whom were as a result of a blunt weapon
assault and one by a sharp-edged weapon. The Post-mortem
report of the deceased revealed that the death was
instantaneous and that the time between death and post
mortem was within six hours. At the trial however he amended
his statement to say that the probable duration between
death and post mortem could also be eight hours. The blood-
stained clothes of the deceased which were a T-shirt and
Pyjamas, were removed and given to the police as case
property.
After completion of investigation, the appellant was
tried by the Sessions Judge, Patiala under Section 302 of
Indian Penal Code as also under Section 27 of the Arms Act.
He was convicted for both the offences and sentenced to life
imprisonment and payment of fine of Rs. 1000/-; in default
further rigorous imprisonment for one year for the former
offence and sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for
one year for the latter offence; sentences to be running
concurrently. They were affirmed in appeal before the High
Court.
The appellant had a counter-version. That version came
as suggestions in the cross-examination of the witnesses as
well as deposition by PW.6 Pushpa, whom the prosecution got
declared hostile at the very initiation of her statement.
The appellant gave the following statement under Section 313
Cr.P.C.:-
"I am innocent. I have been falsely
implicated. On the day of
occurrence in the morning when I
was away from my house to the
market for making purchase of
vegetables etc. deceased intruded
into my house and tried to
criminally assault my wife and she
resisted. In the process she
received injuries at her hands and
she caused injuries to the deceased
with which he died. On my return I
found my wife absent from the house
while the dead-body of the deceased
was there. I then went to the
police Station where my wife was
sitting and she narrated the
occurrence. I also requested the
police to record her statement, but
they refused. The local police then
sent information to Malerlotla and
Sunam and Gurbachan Singh S.I.
father of the deceased arrived, who
arranged Gurnam Singh and Hardial
Singh as PWs. This false case was
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then concocted. The revolver with
live cartridges had been taken to
the police Station by my wife."
P.W.6 Pushpa in her statement admitted having killed the
deceased by the service revolver of the appellant which she
said lay under the pillow on the cot on which the deceased
was found lying dead in position.
The appellant in his defence examined 13 official
witnesses of the Punjab Police of the Wireless Department to
suggest that since the occurrence had taken place at about
8.00 A.M. in the morning, there had been frantic telephonic
and wireless messages by Rajpura Police to Contact S.I
Gurbachan Singh, father of the deceased who was then posted
at Malerkotla. This effort was to dislodge the time of
occurrence as projected by the prosecution and hence the
story by itself.
The learned Sessions Judge devoted more than half of
his judgment in critically examining the defence version as
if it required the standard of proof as that of a
prosecution case. The High Court however avoided pursuing
that course and confined itself to the prosecution case. If
holes can be picked in the defence that doesn’t lead to the
prosecution story being automatically proved. The
prosecution has to stand on its own legs and can derive no
advantage from the weakness of the defence. Keeping that in
view, we proceed further.
The time of the occurrence is seriously in dispute.
According to the prosecution the occurrence took place at
2.00 PM and according to the defence it took place at about
8.00 A.M. in the morning. The Situs of the crime is not
disputed. According to Dr. Vinod Kumar PW. 1 the time
between death and post-mortem could be upto eight hours.
Thus according to the medical opinion the crime could have
been committed eight hours earlier to 5.30 PM, putting it
around 9.00 am. However that cannot be viewed as a
certainty. Coming to the post-mortem Ex.PA, the abdomen of
the deceased when dissected showed that the stomach and its
contents were healthy and empty. The small intestines and
their contents were described as healthy and containing
small amount of semi-digested food. large intestines and
their contents were shown to be healthy and empty. The
bladder was shown to be healthy and containing small amount
of urine. Thus from the post-mortem report, it is
conclusively established that before his death the deceased
had not taken full meals for hours. The prosecution would
have us believe that uptil 2 PM, when he was about to leave
Rajpura for Sunam in the company of his uncle Gurnam Singh
PW, he was not expected to have taken regular breakfast or
the noon-time meal. According to Gurnam Singh PW when he and
Hardial singh had reached Rajpura at about 1.00 PM, they
had not taken tea etc. at the house of the deceased and
further that the deceased also had not taken any food etc.
in the presence of those two. The condition of the stomach
and that of the intestines and the bladder does indicate
that the occurrence perhaps took place much earlier to the
expected time for breakfast and lunch, possibly in the
morning hours. The Courts below have totally ignored this
aspect of the case.
It is worthy of recall that the deceased was an
educated youngman of 25 wanting to set up a business at
Rajpura. He seemingly had done well in building a house of
his own . He had good parentage. Supposedly accompanying
his uncle in order to go to Sunam he is said to have been
wearing a T-shirt and pyjamas, a dress uncommon to be worn
for going to places. The top dress does not match with the
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bottom one. Having regard to the normal pattern of life, the
deceased was expected when wearing a T-shirt to match it
with a pair of trousers or Jeans and not with pyjamas.
Likewise if he was to be wearing pyjamas he would be
matching it with a shirt or a kurta and not a T-shirt . The
manner of hes dress was least suggestive of the fact that he
was set for travel to another destination 55 miles away in
the company of his uncle . The dress of the deceased is
therefore somewhat intriguing. It is more close to the
theory that in morning hours he was casually dressed and had
gone to the house of the accused with designs which were far
from honourable.
The two supposed eye-witnesses Gurnam Singh and Hardial
Singh PWs are from Sunam and according to their own version
seem to have come there to take away the deceased. Their
coming to the house of the deceased is a strange coincidence
orchestrataed so as to witness him being Killed. it is
rather strange that Gurnam Singh PW on his own would be
caring for his nephew to desist from his amorous
relationship with Pushpa, PW without taking into confidence
the deceased’s father. According to his statement he had
kept the affair to himself. Strangely he took into
confidence rather Hardial Singh, P.W. and brought him along
to Rajpura. It is difficult to under stand what purpose had
Hardial Singh to serve in accompanying Gurnam Singh to
Rajpura to fetch the deceased. The prosecution has not
advanced any cogent reason as to why the presence of these
witnesses be not doubted, especially when the time of
occurrence is shrouded in doubt. In addition thereto is the
defence evidence suggesting that both police stations i.e.
at Malerkotla an Sunam where the father and uncle of the
deceased lived respectively were frantically being attempted
to be contacted on police station to police station
connection. All these facts lend credence to the defence
version that the P.W.S had come to know of the crime because
the matter had been reported at the police station in the
first instance by P.W.6 followed by the appellant.
Lastly no one from the neighbourhood has come forward
to support the prosecution even though the investigating
officer says that he questioned some people in the
neighbourhood. It was for him to say as to whom he had
questioned and not for the defence to elicit those names so
as to call those persons in defence, as expected by the
learned Sessions Judge.
Thus on the totality of circumstances we have come to
entertain the doubt that neither of the two supposed eye-
witnesses were present at the scene of the occurrence, nor
have they witnessed the same. we have also entertained the
doubt about the time of the occurrence and the manner in
which the prosecution would have us believe that it took
place. It could well be that it had taken place as suggested
by the defence. The dress of the deceased and the contents
of his abdomen suggest that he was murdered much before 2.00
PM, the time positively asserted by the prosecution.
For the forgoing reasons, we allow this appeal, set
aside the impugned judgment and order of the High Court as
also that of the Court of Session and acquit the appellant
of all charges. The appellant is on bail. His bail bonds are
discharged. Fine, if paid by him be refunded to him .